Upload .ogg audio — Vorbis or Opus — and get clean, timestamped text. No hunting for a tool that accepts the format.
If you have an .ogg file, you already know the problem: it is the format of the open-source world — Audacity exports, Discord recording bots, Linux sound recorders, open game and chat tools — and the format mainstream transcription services most often reject. The usual answer is a converter site and a re-encoded MP3. TranscribeBee just accepts the OGG.
Both common codecs inside the container work — older Vorbis files and the Opus audio that modern voice tools record. Upload the file, pick the spoken language, and the transcript comes back as punctuated, timestamped text with each voice labeled separately, ready to export as TXT, DOC, PDF, or SRT.
This matters most for recordings of conversations that only exist in OGG: a community call captured by a Discord bot, a session recorded on a Linux box, an old archive of Vorbis files. Re-encoding lossy Opus to lossy MP3 audibly degrades exactly the speech you want transcribed. Upload the original instead — it is processed once and automatically deleted afterwards.
Both generations of the format work — classic .ogg Vorbis exports and the Opus audio modern voice tools record. No conversion step.
Community calls and group chats come back segmented by speaker with timestamps, so a two-hour recording is skimmable in minutes.
No "unsupported file type" error, no converter-site detour that re-compresses your audio. The OGG you have is the file we transcribe.
Yes. Both Vorbis and Opus audio inside an .ogg container are accepted. Opus is what most modern voice and chat tools record, and it transcribes just as well.
Yes. Upload the recording the bot produced and it comes back as speaker-labeled text. If the bot gave you one file per participant, upload them individually — each is transcribed and billed by its own duration.
No. Converting Opus or Vorbis to MP3 stacks one lossy encoding on another and audibly degrades the speech. Upload the original .ogg — it is the better input.
The same as any audio: $2 per audio hour with a $2 minimum, billed per file with no subscription. Format never changes the price.
$2 per hour. No subscription. Files are auto-deleted after processing.